Normally I’m the one recommending books here but once a year we switch roles. The latest Literary Lunch competition attracted a record number of entries and the fascinating and eclectic list of book recommendations below. Entrants have to name the book they’d most enjoyed this year regardless of genre or publication date and every time it’s been a mix of some I’ve read, some I know of and many I have never heard of, so that’s how I’ve sorted them. You may need to look up a proper blurb elsewhere because the entrants’ comments were very brief (if any) but some sound very enticing nonetheless.

THOSE I’VE READ
An American Marriage – Tayari Jones (Harri Angell)
Milkman – Anna Burns (Fiona McLeod)
Educated – Tara Westover (One night I couldn’t sleep, worrying about my mom who was so very ill, but that night between midnight and 7am, I forgot to worry about mom and worried about the protagonist instead – Julianne Corrigan. Also nominated by Jo Griffiths.)
Adèle – Leila Slimani (Madame Bovary for our times. Just stunning – Cath Barton)
The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov (how did its presence evade me for so long ? M A Ross)
The Humans – Matt Haig (Laura Sweeney)
On Chapel Sands – Laura Cummings (Bernard O’Keefe)
Days without End – Sebastian Barry (I heard this read beautifully on radio 4. I then had to read it. Very moving. It has haunted me ever since – Elle Gilbert. Also chosen by Jennifer Grigg)
TITLES I KNOW OF (additions to my TBR in bold)
Idaho – Emily Ruskovich (Beautiful, horrific and haunting – Clare Lemay)
The Ghost Wall – Sarah Moss (just spectacularly good, and one of few books that you wish were longer – Anna Maria Tuckett)
Three Women – Lisa Taddeo (Eleni Kyriacou)
The Porpoise – Mark Haddon (Adrienne Rich’s selected poems and Mark Haddon’s The Porpoise both really knocked me out – Eleanor Franzen)
Ducks, Newburyport – Lucy Ellman (hilarious and political and humane and innovative – Chris Oleson)
On earth we’re briefly gorgeous – Ocean Vuong (Ah! It’s breathtaking – Andrew Wille)
The Shepherd’s Hut – Tim Winton (Beautifully written, gritty and moving coming of age story and immersive psychological landscape – Eden Endfield)
The Hunting Party – Lucy Foley (Hemmie Martin)
The Offing – Ben Myers (beautiful, lush, lyrical writing. The story of an unlikely friendship between 16-year-old Robert, and Dulcie, an older woman. Set in Robin Hood’s Bay just after WWII – Amanda Huggins)
Eleanor Oliphant is completely fine – Gail Honeyman (Alana Thompson)
Nine Perfect Strangers – Liane Moriarty (Tense, with great characters. I couldn’t put it down! Helen Yendall)
Circe – Madeleine Miller (Powerful, beautiful and compelling writing – Catherine. Also chosen by Paul Warnes.)
The Sealwoman’s Gift – Sally Magnusson (A beautiful story exploring love and faith in two very different communities, Iceland and Algeria – Cathy De Freitas)
Bold as Brass – Isabel Rogers (Very entertaining – Jacqueline Pye)
NEW ON MY RADAR
Notes to Self – Emilie Pine (Dawn Mannay)
The Salt Path – Raynor Winn (We miss the West Country. Exhilarating to be taken out onto the cliff tops again – Suzanne Fagence Cooper)
A Modern Family – Helga Flatland (the story of sibling rivalry in the wake of an unexpected parental divorce, it’s so perceptive and clever; and funny in parts too – Cath Holland)
Auē – Becky Manawatu (a stunning debut capturing the Māori and Kiwi character in a harrowing story of two brothers and their journey to overcome their sorrowful history – competition winner Shannon Savvas)
The Life to Come – Michele de Kretser (Barry Walsh)
An Unnecessary Woman – Rabih Alameddine (Goosebumps – Keruin)
The Good Priest – Tina Beattie (it is so hard to write about a ‘good’ character and still make that protagonist interesting – Jude Hayland)
The Cactus – Sarah Haywood (Benedicta Norrell)
When All is Said – Anne Griffin (the story of Maurice Hannigan, an 84-year-old Irish man who tells his life story one evening through the five toasts he raises while sitting in the bar of an Irish hotel – Lucille Grant)
I Looked Away – Jane Corry (I could not put it down – Bettina Hunt)
Trinity – Louisa Hall (a beautifully written meditation on bombs and betrayal, patriotism and paranoia around the development, deployment and aftermath of the original weapon of mass destruction – Anne Goodwin)
The Levels – Helen Pendry (a beautifully written, atmospheric mystery set in the heart of Wales – Alison Layland)
The Bookish Life of Nina Hill – Abi Waxxman (Rachel Hawes)
Ladders to Heaven – Mike Shanahan (It’s the story of fig trees but it’s got everything – religion, history, myth, adventure, human culture. It’s utterly spellbinding! V Clarke)
The Break – Marian Keyes (had me laughing out loud, crying my eyes out and every emotion in between – Sandra Pearson)
Surfacing – Kathleen Jamie (Alison)
Their Brilliant Careers: The Fantastic Lives of Sixteen Extraordinary Australian Writers – Ryan O’Neill (Sylvia Petter)
Red Bird – Mary Oliver (Jax Blunt)
Thanks again to everyone who entered for the great recommendations. Which of these would you pick?
*POSTSCRIPT*
Due to various personal and work commitments, my next post will be on Monday 4 November but I promise the Autumn Sofa Spotlight will be worth the wait.
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